Maternal melatonin: Effective intervention against developmental programming of cardiovascular dysfunction in adult offspring of complicated pregnancy
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2021Metadata
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Hansell, Jeremy A.
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Maternal melatonin: Effective intervention against developmental programming of cardiovascular dysfunction in adult offspring of complicated pregnancy
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Abstract
Adopting an integrative approach, by combining studies of cardiovascular function
with those at cellular and molecular levels, this study investigated whether
maternal treatment with melatonin protects against programmed cardiovascular
dysfunction in the offspring using an established rodent model of hypoxic pregnancy.
Wistar rats were divided into normoxic (N) or hypoxic (H, 10% O2) pregnancy
± melatonin (M) treatment (5 μg·ml−1.day−1) in the maternal drinking
water. Hypoxia ± melatonin treatment was from day 15–20
of gestation (term is
ca. 22 days). To control for possible effects of maternal hypoxia-induced
reductions
in maternal food intake, additional dams underwent pregnancy under normoxic
conditions but were pair-fed
(PF) to the daily amount consumed by hypoxic
dams from day 15 of gestation. In one cohort of animals from each experimental
group (N, NM, H, HM, PF, PFM), measurements were made at the end of gestation.
In another, following delivery of the offspring, investigations were made at
adulthood. In both fetal and adult offspring, fixed aorta and hearts were studied
stereologically and frozen hearts were processed for molecular studies. In adult
offspring, mesenteric vessels were isolated and vascular reactivity determined by
in-vitro
wire myography. Melatonin treatment during normoxic, hypoxic or pair-fed
pregnancy elevated circulating plasma melatonin in the pregnant dam and
fetus. Relative to normoxic pregnancy, hypoxic pregnancy increased fetal haematocrit,
promoted asymmetric fetal growth restriction and resulted in accelerated
postnatal catch-up
growth. Whilst fetal offspring of hypoxic pregnancy showed
aortic wall thickening, adult offspring of hypoxic pregnancy showed dilated cardiomyopathy.
Similarly, whilst cardiac protein expression of eNOS was downregulated
in the fetal heart, eNOS protein expression was elevated in the heart
of adult offspring of hypoxic pregnancy. Adult offspring of hypoxic pregnancy further showed enhanced mesenteric vasoconstrictor reactivity to phenylephrine
and the thromboxane mimetic U46619. The effects of hypoxic pregnancy on cardiovascular
remodelling and function in the fetal and adult offspring were independent
of hypoxia-induced
reductions in maternal food intake. Conversely,
the effects of hypoxic pregnancy on fetal and postanal growth were similar in
pair-fed
pregnancies. Whilst maternal treatment of normoxic or pair-fed
pregnancies
with melatonin on the offspring cardiovascular system was unremarkable,
treatment of hypoxic pregnancies with melatonin in doses lower than those
recommended for overcoming jet lag in humans enhanced fetal cardiac eNOS
expression and prevented all alterations in cardiovascular structure and function
in fetal and adult offspring. Therefore, the data support that melatonin is a potential
therapeutic target for clinical intervention against developmental origins
of cardiovascular dysfunction in pregnancy complicated by chronic fetal hypoxia
Patrocinador
British Heart Foundation PG06/060/20918
PG/18/5/33527
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Artículo de publícación WoS Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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J Pineal Res. 2022;72:e12766.
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